Mr. Loguidice is a top business, technology, staffing, and creative professional, a noted videogame and computer subject matter expert, and a critically acclaimed author. Bill is also the co-founder and Managing Director for the online publication, Armchair Arcade, one of PC Magazine's Top 100 Websites. As a renowned videogame and computer historian and collector, Bill personally owns and maintains well over 400 different systems from the 1970s to the present day, including a large volume of associated software, accessories, and literature. It is from these great resources and his sincere passion for the topic that Bill is often called upon to provide subject matter expertise to both public and private media interests. Bill is co-author of the following critically acclaimed books: "Vintage Games: An Insider Look at the History of Grand Theft Auto, Super Mario and the Most Influential Games of All Time" (2009, Focal Press; which received an Italian translation), "Wii Fitness For Dummies" (2010, Wiley; making use of his AFTA personal training certification), "Motorola ATRIX For Dummies" (2011, Wiley), and "My Xbox: Xbox 360, Kinect, and Xbox LIVE" (2012, Que Publishing). Bill is hard at work on other upcoming books and projects, including a feature film documentary on the history of videogames entitled, "Gameplay: The Story of the Videogame Revolution", for Lux Digital Pictures, which is scheduled for completion in 2012.

Thanks for the comment, Titus. I agree that distilling all of the gameplay down to the Atari 2600 's one button joystick was quite impressive. Any of the clumsiness of the Atari 2600 version - like having to go down to the ground to perform a warp - was probably ...

These should be a great value if they combine the benefits of a tablet always on, incredible battery life with the benefits of a traditional laptop with little compromise as promised. The pen support is also an important part of that equation. When these come out in force and if ...

When you say, several inaccuracies Mr. Todonero, you mean two , right Obviously, we meant MOS CPU and not Motorola - a typo that should have been caught - and the statement as written about Kassar is accurate. While it's true that it was Steve Ross's decision, it was still ...